The practice of consciously enlarging our circle of care beyond ego-protection, allowing love to become larger and more binding than the fear of loss.
What distinguished Mirabai's devotion was its expansiveness: she loved not selectively but radically, transcending caste, gender, and social boundary. This vast love was stronger than fear of social destruction. In anticipatory grief, we face a choice: contract in fear, protecting only what is ours, or expand in love, holding the whole. Fear narrows vision and calcifies community. Love dissolves false boundaries and reveals interconnection. When we deliberately practice loving civilization—its diversity, its fragility, its beauty, its struggling peoples—we move beyond anticipatory grief into anticipatory devotion. We begin to ask not only what will be lost but how we might love more fully now. How might we extend care beyond our immediate circle? How might we see ourselves in the stranger, the future generation, the species we depend on? This enlargement of love does not erase grief but sanctifies it. We grieve what we love, and we love what we grieve, and in that paradox lies our deepest power.
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